Planet Earth teems with life and includes thousands of species of vertebrate animals (mammals, reptiles, fish, and birds); invertebrates (insects, crustaceans, and protozoans); trees, flowers, grasses, and grains; and a bewildering array of bacteria, and algae, plus single-celled organisms—some inhabiting scalding deep-sea thermal vents. And yet, this rich profusion of flora and fauna seems paltry compared to the ecosystems of the deep past. By most reckonings, since the beginning of life on Earth, a whopping 99.9% of all species have gone extinct. Why?
This is the first thing most people associate with the word "extinction," and not without reason, since we all know that a meteor impact on the Yucatán Peninsula in Mexico caused the disappearance of the dinosaurs 65 million years ago. It's likely that many of the Earth's mass extinctions—not only the K-T extinction, but also the much more severe Permian-Triassic extinction—were caused by such impact events, and astronomers are constantly on the lookout for comets or meteors that could spell the end of human civilization
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Climate Change
Even in the absence of major asteroid or comet impacts—which can potentially lower worldwide temperatures by 20 or 30 degrees Fahrenheit—climate change poses a constant danger to terrestrial animals. You need to look no further than the end of the last Ice Age, about 11,000 years ago, when various megafauna mammals were unable to adapt to quickly warming temperatures. They also succumbed to a lack of food and predation by early humans. And we all know about the long-term threat global warming presents to modern civilization.
Disease
While it's unusual for disease alone to wipe out a given species—the groundwork has to be laid first by starvation, loss of habitat, and/or lack of genetic diversity—the introduction of a particularly lethal virus or bacterium at an inopportune moment can wreak havoc. Witness the crisis currently facing the world's amphibians, which are falling prey to chytridiomycosis, a fungal infection that ravages the skin of frogs, toads, and salamanders, and causes death within a few weeks, not to mention the Black Death that wiped out a third of Europe's population during the Middle Ages.
Loss of Habitat
Most animals require a certain amount of territory in which they can hunt and forage, breed, and raise their young, and (when necessary) expand their population. A single bird may be content with the high branch of a tree, while large predatory mammals (like Bengal tigers) measure their domains in square miles. As human civilization expands relentlessly into the wild, these natural habitats diminish in scope—and their restricted and dwindling populations are more susceptible to other extinction pressures.
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